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"Bitew, Tesera"
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Perceived learning difficulty associates with depressive symptoms and substance use among students of higher educational institutions in North Western Ethiopia: A cross sectional study
2020
The potential role of perceived learning difficulty on depressive symptoms and substance use in the context of student population was seldom studied. This study aimed to investigate the association of perceived learning difficulty with depressive symptoms and substance use among university students in northwest Ethiopia.
A cross sectional study was conducted on 710 pre-engineering students. A locally validated version of Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) was used to assess depressive symptoms at a cut off 5-9 indicating mild depressive symptoms and at a cut off 10 for major depressive symptoms. Perceived difficulty in school work was assessed by items dealing about difficulties in areas of course work. The response alternatives of these items were 0 = not at all, 1 = not so much, 2 = quite much, 3 = very much. The types of substances that students had used in their life and in the last three months were assessed. Negative binomial regression and multinomial regressions were employed to investigate the predictors of number of substance use and depressive symptoms respectively.
The prevalence of depressive symptoms was 71.4% (Mild: 30% and Major 41.4%). About 24.6% of participants had the experience of using at least one substance. Increment in perceived difficulties in learning score was associated with more use of substances (aRRR = 1.03, 95% CI: 1.01-1.06), mild level depressive symptoms (aOR = 1.10, 95% CI: 1.04, 1.56 and major depressive symptoms (aOR = 1.19, 95% CI: 1.13, 1.26). Every increment in anxiety score was associated with increased risk of mild level of depressive symptoms (aOR = 1.09, 95% CI: 1.01, 1.17) and major depressive symptoms (aOR = 1.28, 95% CI: 1.18, 1.37). Being male (aRRR = 5.54, 95% CI: 3.28, 9.36), urban residence (aRRR = 2.46, 95% CI: 1.62, 3.72) and increment in number of life threatening events (aRRR = 1.143, 95% CI: 1.08, 1.22) were associated with increased risk of substance use.
Perceived difficulties in learning independently predicted increased depressive symptoms as well as substance use among participants.
Journal Article
Under detection of depression in primary care settings in low and middle-income countries: a systematic review and meta-analysis
by
Fekadu, Abebaw
,
Bitew, Tesera
,
Minaye, Abebaw
in
Biomedicine
,
Depression
,
Depression - diagnosis
2022
Background
Depression is one of the commonest mental disorders in primary care but is poorly identified. The objective of this review was to determine the level of detection of depression by primary care clinicians and its determinants in studies from low- to middle-income countries (LMICs).
Methods
A systematic review and meta-analysis was conducted using PubMed, PsycINFO, MEDLINE, EMBASE, LILAC, and AJOL with no restriction of year of publication. Risk of bias within studies was evaluated with the Effective Public Health Practice Project (EPHPP). “Gold standard” diagnosis for the purposes of this review was based on the 9-item Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9; cutoff scores of 5 and 10), other standard questionnaires and interview scales or expert diagnosis. Meta-analysis was conducted excluding studies on special populations. Analyses of pooled data were stratified by diagnostic approaches.
Results
A total of 3159 non-duplicate publications were screened. Nine publications, 2 multi-country studies, and 7 single-country studies, making 12 country-level reports, were included. Overall methodological quality of the studies was good. Depression detection was 0.0% in four of the twelve reports and < 12% in another five. PHQ-9 was the main tool used: the pooled detection in two reports that used PHQ-9 at a cutoff point of 5 (combined sample size = 1426) was 3.9% (95% CI = 2.3%, 5.5%); in four reports that used PHQ-9 cutoff score of 10 (combined sample size = 5481), the pooled detection was 7.0% (95% CI = 3.9%, 10.2%). Severity of depression and suicidality were significantly associated with detection.
Conclusions
While the use of screening tools is an important limitation, the extremely low detection of depression by primary care clinicians poses a serious threat to scaling up mental healthcare in LMICs. Interventions to improve detection should be prioritized.
Systematic review registration
PROSPERO
CRD42016039704
.
Journal Article
Stakeholder perspectives on antenatal depression and the potential for psychological intervention in rural Ethiopia: a qualitative study
by
Keynejad, Roxanne
,
Fekadu, Abebaw
,
Bitew, Tesera
in
Acceptability
,
Adult
,
Antenatal depressive symptoms
2020
Background
Psychological interventions for antenatal depression are an integral part of evidence-based care but need to be contextualised for respective sociocultural settings. In this study, we aimed to understand women and healthcare workers’ (HCWs) perspectives of antenatal depression, their treatment preferences and potential acceptability and feasibility of psychological interventions in the rural Ethiopian context.
Methods
In-depth interviews were conducted with women who had previously scored above the locally validated cut-off (five or more) on the Patient Health Questionnaire during pregnancy (
n
= 8), primary healthcare workers (HCWs; nurses, midwives and health officers) (
n
= 8) and community-based health extension workers (
n
= 7). Translated interview transcripts were analysed using thematic analysis.
Results
Women expressed their distress largely through somatic complaints, such as a headache and feeling weak. Facility and community-based HCWs suspected antenatal depression when women reported reduced appetite, sleep problems, difficulty bonding with the baby, or if they refused to breast-feed or were poorly engaged with antenatal care. Both women and HCWs perceived depression as a reaction (“thinking too much”) to social adversities such as poverty, marital conflict, perinatal complications and losses. Depressive symptoms and social adversities were often attributed to spiritual causes. Women awaited God’s will in isolation at home or talked to neighbours as coping mechanisms. HCWs’ motivation to provide help, the availability of integrated primary mental health care and a culture among women of seeking advice were potential facilitators for acceptability of a psychological intervention. Fears of being seen publicly during pregnancy, domestic and farm workload and staff shortages in primary healthcare were potential barriers to acceptability of the intervention. Antenatal care providers such as midwives were considered best placed to deliver interventions, given their close interaction with women during pregnancy.
Conclusions
Women and HCWs in rural Ethiopia linked depressive symptoms in pregnancy with social adversities, suggesting that interventions which help women cope with real-world difficulties may be acceptable. Intervention design should accommodate the identified facilitators and barriers to implementation.
Journal Article
Antenatal predictors of incident and persistent postnatal depressive symptoms in rural Ethiopia: a population-based prospective study
by
Medhin, Girmay
,
Fekadu, Abebaw
,
Bitew, Tesera
in
Adult
,
Delivery (Childbirth)
,
Depression (Mood disorder)
2019
Background
There have been few studies to examine antenatal predictors of incident postnatal depression, particularly in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). The aim of this study was to investigate antenatal predictors of incident and persistent maternal depression in a rural Ethiopian community in order to inform development of antenatal interventions.
Method
A population-based prospective study was conducted in Sodo district, south central Ethiopia. A locally validated version of the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) was used to assess antenatal (second and third trimesters) and postnatal (4–12 weeks after childbirth) depressive symptoms, with a PHQ-9 cut-off of five or more indicating high depressive symptoms. Poisson regression with robust standard errors was used to identify independent predictors of persistence and incidence of postnatal depressive symptoms from a range of antenatal, clinical and psychosocial risk factors.
Result
Out of 1311 women recruited antenatally, 1240 (356 with and 884 without antenatal depressive symptoms) were followed up in the postnatal period. Among 356 women with antenatal depressive symptoms, the elevated symptoms persisted into postnatal period in 138 women (38.8%). Out of 884 women without antenatal depressive symptoms, 136 (15.4%) experienced incident elevated depressive symptoms postnatally. The prevalence of high postnatal depressive symptoms in the follow-up sample was 274 (22.1%). Higher intimate partner violence scores in pregnancy were significantly associated with greater risk of incident depressive symptoms [adjusted Risk Ratio (aRR) = 1.06, 95% CI: 1.00, 1.12]. Each 1-point increment in baseline PHQ-9 score predicted an increased risk of incidence of postnatal depressive symptoms (aRR = 1.29, 95% CI: 1.15, 1.45). There was no association between self-reported pregnancy complications, medical conditions or experience of threatening life events with either incidence or persistence of depressive symptoms.
Conclusion
Psychological and social interventions to address intimate partner violence during pregnancy may be the most important priorities, able to address both incident and persistent depression.
Journal Article
Pregnant women and health workers’ perspectives on perinatal mental health and intimate partner violence in rural Ethiopia: a qualitative interview study
by
Keynejad, Roxanne C.
,
Bitew, Tesera
,
Mulushoa, Adiyam
in
Antenatal care
,
Community
,
Domestic violence
2023
Background
Mental health conditions are common during the perinatal period and associated with maternal, foetal, and neonatal morbidity and mortality. There is an established bidirectional relationship between mental health conditions and intimate partner violence (IPV), including during and after pregnancy. Mean lifetime prevalence of physical, sexual or emotional IPV exposure among women in rural Ethiopia is estimated to be 61% and may be even higher during the perinatal period. We aimed to explore the perspectives of women and antenatal care (ANC) health workers on the relationship between all types of IPV and perinatal mental health, to inform the adaptation of a psychological intervention for pregnant women experiencing IPV in rural Ethiopia.
Methods
We conducted in-depth qualitative interviews with 16 pregnant women and 12 health workers in the Gurage zone of the Southern Nations, Nationalities and People’s Region of Ethiopia, between December 2018 and December 2019. We conducted thematic analysis of English-translated transcripts of audio-recorded Amharic-language interviews.
Results
Participants contextualised IPV as the primary form of abusive treatment women experienced, connected by multiple pathways to emotional and bodily distress. Patriarchal norms explained how the actions of neighbours, family, community leaders, law enforcement, and government agents in response to IPV often reinforced women’s experiences of abuse. This created a sense of powerlessness, exacerbated by the tension between high cultural expectations of reciprocal generosity and severe deprivation. Women and health workers advocated a psychological intervention to address women’s powerlessness over the range of difficulties they faced in their daily lives.
Conclusions
Women and health workers in rural Ethiopia perceive multiple, interconnected pathways between IPV and perinatal emotional difficulties. Contrary to expectations of sensitivity, women and health workers were comfortable discussing the impact of IPV on perinatal mental health, and supported the need for brief mental health interventions integrated into ANC.
Journal Article
The feasibility and acceptability of implementing simplified cognitive behavioral therapy approaches to support postpartum mental health and address associated social and behavioral barriers to postpartum family planning in Amhara, Ethiopia: a qualitative study
by
Burgess, Sarah
,
Bitew, Tesera
,
Souffrant, Julien
in
Acquired immune deficiency syndrome
,
Adult
,
AIDS
2025
Background
Poor mental health can negatively impact health outcomes across diverse health areas, including in the first year postpartum. Yet, the intersection of postpartum mental health and postpartum family planning (FP) is understudied. Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) is an evidence-based practice that has proven helpful for improving mental health and supporting positive behavior change across health areas, including in low-resource settings. Drawing on existing CBT tools, we created and piloted an intervention called
Mothers Time,
designed to be delivered in three sessions by a community health worker (CHW) to small groups of postpartum women experiencing depression or anxiety symptoms and an unmet need for FP. Our objective was to assess the feasibility and acceptability of
Mothers Time
in rural Amhara, Ethiopia.
Methods
We recruited and trained four CHWs to deliver the intervention. We recruited 16 postpartum women experiencing mild to moderate anxiety and depressive symptoms to participate. We conducted in-depth interviews with women and CHWs before, during and after the intervention. We used a framework approach to analyze data. To assess acceptability, we analyzed data from mothers, probing to understand whether they found the intervention accessible, engaging, and relevant for the challenges they were experiencing postpartum. To assess feasibility, we explored CHWs ability to deliver the intervention and analyzed their capacity to deliver it at consistent quality. Interviews with CHWs and other health actors provided additional data on the feasibility of adding simplified CBT to CHWs' current package of services.
Results
Mothers perceived
Mothers Time
to be acceptable and to provide helpful tools for navigating the postpartum period. Prior to the intervention, many women felt isolated, and the group sessions supported social connection. Vignettes demonstrating simple CBT concepts engaged mothers, provoking reflection on how anxious or sad thoughts can impact behaviors that are important for informed FP use (such as care seeking, spousal communication and planning for the future) and sparked discussions on how mothers can support their own mental and physical health. Homework (explained by CHW in sessions and completed independently between sessions) helped women prioritize caring for themselves and social connection. Overall, we found that it was feasible for CHW to learn and deliver
Mothers Time
. CHW understood that mental health could create challenges for mothers and were able to use the simplified materials to share information about basic mental health concepts. Limited time was the biggest challenge; CHWs would benefit from additional training, and women would likely benefit from additional sessions.
Conclusion
This research may be useful to practitioners looking to integrate mental health and postpartum FP in low-resource settings. These findings can be used as a foundation for future research and pilot interventions to support all women to meet their postpartum and FP needs, including those living with symptoms of depression and anxiety.
Journal Article
Adapting an intervention of brief problem-solving therapy to improve the health of women with antenatal depressive symptoms in primary healthcare in rural Ethiopia
by
Keynejad, Roxanne
,
Bitew, Tesera
,
Honikman, Simone
in
Adaptation
,
Africa
,
Antenatal depression
2022
Background
Evidence-based brief psychological interventions are safe and effective for the treatment of antenatal depressive symptoms. However, the adaptation of such interventions for low- and middle-income countries has not been prioritised. This study aimed to select and adapt a brief psychological intervention for women with antenatal depressive symptoms attending primary healthcare (PHC) in rural Ethiopia.
Methods
We employed the Medical Research Council (MRC) framework for the development and evaluation of complex interventions. Alongside this, we used the ADAPT-ITT model of process adaptation and the ecological validity model (EVM) to guide content adaptation. We conducted formative work, comprising a qualitative study, a series of three participatory theories of change workshops and an expert adaptation workshop to assess the needs of the target population and to select an intervention for adaptation. The adaptation process followed a series of steps: (1) training Ethiopian mental health experts in the original South African problem-solving therapy (PST version 0.0) and an initial adaptation workshop leading to PST Version 1.0. (2) Version 1.0 was presented to perinatal women and healthcare professionals in the form of a ‘theatre test’, leading to further adaptations (version 2.0). (3) Local and international stakeholders reviewed version 2.0, leading to version 3.0, which was used to train 12 PHC staff using clinical cases. (4) Finally, feedback about PST version 3.0 and its delivery was obtained from PHC staff.
Results
In the first step, we modified case examples and terminology from the South African model, introduced an in-session pictorial flipchart for this low literacy setting, and added strategies to facilitate women’s engagement before translating into Amharic. In the second step, adaptations included renaming of the types of problems and inclusion of more exercises to demonstrate proposed coping strategies. In the third step, the components of motivational interviewing were dropped due to cultural incongruence. In the final step, refresher training was delivered as well as additional training on supporting control of women’s emotions to address PHC staff training needs, leading to the final version (version 4.0).
Conclusion
Using a series of steps, we have adapted the content and delivery of brief PST to fit the cultural context of this setting. The next step will be to assess the feasibility and acceptability of the intervention and its delivery in antenatal care settings.
Journal Article
Problem solving therapy (PST) tailored for intimate partner violence (IPV) versus standard PST and enhanced usual care for pregnant women experiencing IPV in rural Ethiopia: protocol for a randomised controlled feasibility trial
by
Medhin, Girmay
,
Bitew, Tesera
,
Honikman, Simone
in
Anxiety
,
Anxiety - psychology
,
Anxiety - therapy
2020
Background
In rural Ethiopia, 72% of women are exposed to lifetime intimate partner violence (IPV); IPV is most prevalent during pregnancy. As well as adversely affecting women’s physical and mental health, IPV also increases the risk of child morbidity and mortality associated with maternal depression, thus making antenatal care an important opportunity for intervention. Adapting generic, task-shared, brief psychological interventions for perinatal depression and anxiety to address the needs and experiences of women affected by IPV may improve acceptability to women and feasibility for health workers. This randomised controlled feasibility trial will compare brief problem solving therapy (PST) specifically adapted for pregnant women experiencing IPV (PST-IPV) with standard PST and enhanced usual care to determine the feasibility of a future fully powered randomised controlled trial.
Methods
Seventy-five pregnant women scoring five or more on the Patient Health Questionnaire, endorsing a tenth question about functional impact and reporting past-year IPV, will be recruited from antenatal care clinics in predominantly rural districts in Ethiopia. Consenting participants will be randomised to either four sessions of PST-IPV, four sessions of standard PST or information about sources of support (enhanced usual care) in a three-arm design. The interventions will be delivered by trained, supervised antenatal care staff using a task-sharing model. Assessments will be made at baseline and after 9 weeks by masked outcome assessors and will include measures of depression symptoms (primary outcome), post-traumatic stress, anxiety symptoms, functional impact, past-month IPV and hypothesised mediators (secondary outcomes). A mixed-method process evaluation will determine the feasibility of a future randomised controlled trial, assess the feasibility, acceptability, fidelity and quality of implementation of PST-IPV, generate testable hypotheses about causal mechanisms, and identify potential contextual factors influencing outcomes.
Discussion
Despite mental health being a critical concern for women experiencing IPV, there is limited evidence for brief, task-shared psychological interventions adapted for their needs in low- and middle-income countries. Contextually tailored interventions for pregnant women experiencing IPV in low- and middle-income countries require development and process evaluation. This randomised controlled feasibility trial will yield results on the feasibility of conducting a fully powered trial, relevant to researchers, primary and antenatal care clinicians in resource-limited settings.
Trial registration
Pan-African clinical trials registry:
PACTR202002513482084
. Prospectively registered on 13 December 2019.
Journal Article
Antenatal depressive symptoms and utilisation of delivery and postnatal care: a prospective study in rural Ethiopia
by
Kebede, Eskinder
,
Fekadu, Abebaw
,
Onah, Michael N.
in
Activities of daily living
,
Antenatal depressive symptoms
,
Assisted delivery
2017
Background
Uptake of delivery and postnatal care remains low in Low and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs), where 99% of global maternal deaths take place. However, the potential impact of antenatal depression on use of institutional delivery and postnatal care has seldom been examined. This study aimed to examine whether antenatal depressive symptoms are associated with use of maternal health care services.
Methods
A population-based prospective study was conducted in Sodo District, Southern Ethiopia. Depressive symptoms were assessed during pregnancy with a locally validated, Amharic version of the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9). A cut off score of five or more indicated possible depression. A total of 1251 women were interviewed at a median of 8 weeks (4–12 weeks) after delivery. Postnatal outcome variables were: institutional delivery care utilization, type of delivery, i.e. spontaneous or assisted, and postnatal care utilization. Multivariate logistic regression was used to examine the association between antenatal depressive symptoms and the outcome variables.
Results
High levels of antenatal depressive symptoms (PHQ score 5 or higher) were found in 28.7% of participating women. Nearly two-thirds, 783 women (62.6%), delivered in healthcare institutions. After adjusting for potential confounders, women with antenatal depressive symptoms had increased odds of reporting institutional birth [adjusted Odds Ratio (aOR) =1.42, 95% Confidence Interval (CI): 1.06, 1.92] and increased odds of reporting having had an assisted delivery (aOR = 1.72, 95% CI: 1.10, 2.69) as compared to women without these symptoms. However, the increased odds of institutional delivery among women with antenatal depressive symptoms was associated with unplanned delivery care use mainly due to emergency reasons (aOR = 1.62, 95% CI: 1.09, 2.42) rather than planning to deliver in healthcare institutions.
Conclusion
Improved detection and treatment of antenatal depression has the potential to increase planned institutional delivery and reduce perinatal complications, thus contributing to a reduction in maternal morbidity and mortality.
Journal Article
Brief problem-solving therapy (PST) for women experiencing antenatal depressive symptoms: a randomised, controlled feasibility trial in an antenatal care setting in rural Ethiopia
by
Keynejad, Roxanne
,
Medhin, Girmay
,
Bitew, Tesera
in
Antenatal depression
,
Antidepressants
,
Biomedicine
2025
Background
We adapted non-specialist healthcare worker (HCW) delivered problem-solving therapy (PST) to support improved treatment of antenatal depression in maternal healthcare platforms in rural Ethiopia. In this study, we aimed to evaluate the feasibility, fidelity, and acceptability of PST for antenatal depression and the procedures required for the implementation of a fully-powered randomised controlled trial (RCT).
Methods
Participants were consecutive antenatal care (ANC) attendees in two primary healthcare (PHC)-based healthcare facilities, based on pre-established eligibility criteria. We employed a randomised, controlled feasibility trial design with two parallel groups. Participants in the intervention arm received four sessions of a contextually adapted version of PST; the control group received enhanced usual care (EUC) that involved routine antenatal care and information about sources of support. Assessments were conducted at baseline (T
0
) and at 9 weeks after randomisation (T
1
). Assessment at T
1
mainly comprised of preliminary clinical outcomes and hypothesized mediators. At T
2
, feasibility parameters were assessed in addition to T
1
assessments. A recruitment rate of 80% of the expected sample size within a month, retention rate of ≥ 50%, provider competence of ≥ 60%, less than 10% adverse events and mean session duration of 30 min were assumed for feasibility success. We summarised participant characteristics, feasibility outcomes, and preliminary clinical outcomes using descriptive statistics.
Results
After screening and the consent process, we randomised 50 eligible women to PST and EUC arms. Trial procedures such as participant recruitment and allocation concealment were feasible. Most (64%) completed all four sessions of the intervention. About 58% of HCWs attained expected scores on Enhancing Assessment of Common Therapeutic factors (ENACT) scale. No adverse events occurred during the trial. Supervision reports indicated that HCWs appreciated skills gained from PST and adhered to most of the PST content, except challenging women who reported not having problems or worries. However, they recommended pre-recorded videos of role play demonstrations and shorter trainer demonstrations, to increase trainees’ opportunities to practise skills.
Conclusions
Participant recruitment, screening, randomisation, masking, as well as the intervention delivery process, were feasible. Future training should prioritise opportunities for HCWs to practise skills as much as possible.
https://pilotfeasibilitystudies.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s40814-021-00773-8
Trial registration
The protocol was registered in the Pan-African clinical trials registry, (PACTR): registration number: PACTR202008712234907 on 18/08/2020; URL:
https://pactr.samrc.ac.za/TrialDisplay.aspx?TrialID=9578
. The protocol has also been published:
https://pilotfeasibilitystudies.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s40814-021-00773-8
.
Journal Article